Location

Amenities

Description

Bunkhouse accommodation in the beautiful Pembrokeshire Coast National Park. Situated in a secluded rural setting within 1.7 acres. Just just two miles from the stunning Blue Flag beach at Newgale and within an easy drive of Solva and St Davids. Skomer Lodge and Ramsay Lodge together form Newgale Lodge, which sleeps up to 38 people in total. It is designed to provide affordable group accommodation and is a perfect base for all group holidays, activity breaks, team events and residential programmes. Rooms can be booked individually but Newgale Lodge is also available for exclusive use bookings. It offers ample car parking and provides good quality food in the Lodge Café as well as self catering provision. Please contact us to discuss booking for smaller or larger groups As well as affordable group accommodation, we also provide meeting and conference facilities. We can coordinate a range of outdoor activities, run team building events or longer residential development programmes. There is an on-site catering facility and you are welcome to upgrade your booking to B&B, Half-Board or Full-Board.

Travel Blogs from Penycwm

... s nothing better than ambition and adventure, so even if you don't fancy leaving your family, just try it? you never know, you might 'find yourself' or something. just don't be boring. this is only one girl's opinion of course. but if you want my advice, if you get the chance, don't miss it. <b><i>'the world is a book, and those who do not travel read only a page' - St Augustine</i></b> ...

As an extremely inexperienced and most probably awful travel writer, with no clue as to how I should even begin a travel blog, I thought my first post should introduce who I am, what I do and why I'm writing a travel blog in the first place. So - my name is Holly Skyrme, I'm 18 years old, live in Wales in the UK, and really struggle to pack 'light'. I am taking a gap year before studying for a Geography Degree at The University of Leeds. My primary basis for writing a travel blog is ...

... on all 11 screens? If you didn't guess rugby, you were wrong. The Italy vs Romania match was on when we arrived, so we sat down with a pint and watched it. The following match was Ireland bs France, and the pub started to fill up with Irish, from who knows where. Anyway it was a great atmosphere, and thankfully the Irish won.We then went for a walk around the lovely narrow streets; had dinner at a proper fish & chippy caff, and then back to the pub. You can drink gallons of thish ...

... Autumn here and the rolling hills are covered with trees with various shades of brown, orange, yellow and green; intermixed with horse and heather in different colors.We reach Pembrokeshire which encompasses the South-West peninsular of Wales. Heading to Fishguard on the north coast, which is a major fishing town; and from where you can ferry to Ireland.

... a fine small town with a castle dominating the river crossing with a good range of shops in the old stone buildings. To return we took a less direct route which took us on to a headland via a winding, narrow entrenched road & to our horror met a big farm tractor towing a trailer with massive bales of hay. Having just survived this encounter we drove for what seemed ages through a couple of small villages before coming back into Newport & greatly relieved arrived ...